EICR Certificate
21 May 2026
Leasehold flats are one of the most common property types in London, but when it comes to electrical safety, responsibility is not always straightforward. A flat may be owned by a leaseholder, managed by a freeholder, occupied by a tenant, overseen by a managing agent and connected to communal electrical systems serving the wider building. That is exactly where EICR confusion starts.
If an Electrical Installation Condition Report is needed, who arranges it? Who pays for it? Is it the leaseholder, the landlord, the tenant, the freeholder or the managing agent? What happens if the EICR fails because of wiring that appears to run through a communal area? And can the cost of electrical testing or remedial work be added to a service charge?
These are not small questions. In London, EICR responsibility can quickly become a dispute between leaseholders, landlords, freeholders, block managers and tenants. The issue becomes even more urgent when a flat is being rented, sold, refinanced or prepared for a new tenant.
For private rented properties in England, landlords are required to have the electrical installation inspected and tested by a qualified person at least every five years, usually through an EICR. Landlords must also provide the report to existing tenants within 28 days and to new tenants before they occupy the property. The official regulations place duties on private landlords and allow local housing authorities to enforce them.
For leasehold flats, the situation is more layered. The lease usually defines what belongs to the flat, what belongs to the building, what the leaseholder must maintain and what the freeholder or management company controls. Service charge rules also matter because leaseholders can usually be asked to contribute to building maintenance and management costs only where the lease allows it.
This guide explains how EICR responsibility normally works in London leasehold flats, who usually pays, where disputes happen and how to avoid expensive delays.
An EICR, or Electrical Installation Condition Report, is a formal inspection and test of the fixed electrical installation within a property. It is not the same as a PAT test, a visual check or a quick look at the fuse box. A proper EICR assesses whether the electrical installation is safe for continued use.
In a leasehold flat, the EICR usually covers the electrical installation inside the flat. This can include:
• Consumer unit or fuse board
• Main protective bonding where accessible
• Sockets and switches
• Lighting circuits
• Cooker circuits
• Shower circuits
• Fixed electrical accessories
• Circuit protection
• Earthing arrangements
• Signs of overheating, damage or unsafe alterations
• Electrical test readings
• Any limitations agreed before the inspection
For a rented flat, the EICR is especially important because it provides evidence that the landlord has taken steps to comply with electrical safety duties. For an owner-occupied leasehold flat, an EICR may not be a routine legal requirement in the same way, but it can still be very important when buying, selling, refurbishing, investigating faults or dealing with the freeholder or managing agent.
If you need a standard inspection for a rented or owner-occupied flat, you can book through our EICR Services in London page. If the property is rented to tenants, our dedicated EICR Certificates for Landlords in London page explains the landlord side in more detail.
Leasehold flats are different from freehold houses because the person who owns the flat does not usually own the whole building outright. Instead, the leaseholder owns a long lease for the flat, while the freeholder owns the building structure and common parts.
This creates a practical problem. The electrical installation may not always be neatly separated in the way people assume.
For example, a leasehold flat may have:
• Its own consumer unit inside the flat
• A meter cupboard in a communal hallway
• Rising mains or supply cables controlled by the building
• Communal lighting outside the flat entrance
• Fire alarm systems in common areas
• Door entry systems
• Emergency lighting in stairwells
• Landlord supplies for shared areas
• Electrical intake equipment in a locked cupboard
• Distribution boards serving common parts
The EICR for the individual flat is usually separate from the EICR for communal areas. That distinction is crucial.
An EICR for the flat normally looks at the installation serving that individual property. An EICR for communal areas normally looks at the shared electrical installation controlled by the freeholder, managing agent or block management company. If these two are confused, disputes can begin very quickly.
If your issue relates to communal areas, stairwells, landlord supplies, meter cupboards or shared parts of a block, our article on EICR for communal areas in converted flats and blocks of flats is a useful supporting guide.
In most cases, responsibility for the EICR inside the flat depends on how the flat is used.
If the leasehold flat is owner-occupied, the leaseholder is normally responsible for the electrical installation inside the flat, subject to the terms of the lease. The leaseholder may choose to arrange an EICR for safety, mortgage, sale, refurbishment or peace of mind reasons. For this type of property, our EICR Certificates for Homeowners in London service is usually the most relevant route.
If the leasehold flat is rented out to tenants, the leaseholder is also acting as a landlord. In that situation, the landlord has legal responsibilities for electrical safety in the rented property. The landlord usually needs a valid EICR for the rental accommodation and must deal with any required remedial work if the report is unsatisfactory.
If the flat is empty between tenants, the landlord should not wait until the last minute. A failed EICR can delay a move-in date, cause tenant complaints and create pressure to complete remedial work quickly. If you are preparing a flat for a new tenancy, book through our Book Online page before the tenant’s start date.
Communal electrical areas are usually a separate issue. These may include stairwell lighting, communal sockets, landlord supplies, fire alarm systems, emergency lighting, door entry equipment, external lighting and electrical systems serving shared corridors or plant rooms.
In many leasehold blocks, these areas are managed by the freeholder, residents’ management company, right-to-manage company or managing agent. Responsibility depends on the lease and management structure.
The cost of maintaining, testing or repairing communal electrical systems may be recovered through the service charge if the lease allows it. Government guidance on service charges confirms that the lease sets out how service charges are organised and what can be charged. Leaseholders also have rights to ask for a summary and inspect supporting paperwork.
That means a leaseholder should not automatically assume they are personally responsible for communal electrical defects. Equally, the freeholder or managing agent should not automatically push every electrical issue back onto the leaseholder without checking where the installation sits and what the lease says.
A proper inspection helps separate these issues. If the fault is inside the flat, it may be the leaseholder or landlord’s responsibility. If the fault belongs to the communal installation, it may fall to the freeholder, managing agent or building management structure.
The simplest answer is this: the person responsible for the electrical installation being tested usually pays for the EICR.
For an individual owner-occupied leasehold flat, the leaseholder normally pays for their own flat EICR.
For a leasehold flat rented to tenants, the landlord usually pays for the EICR because the legal responsibility sits with the landlord.
For communal electrical installations, the freeholder, management company or managing agent may arrange the EICR, and the cost may be recovered through service charges if the lease allows it.
For mixed-use buildings, such as shops below flats or offices below residential units, responsibility may be more complicated. In those cases, the electrical installation may be split between commercial supplies, landlord areas, residential flats and communal areas. If you are dealing with a commercial or mixed-use property, our Commercial EICR Certificates in London page is the best starting point.
The key point is not just who owns the flat. The key point is which electrical installation is being inspected and who controls it.
This is where many disputes become expensive.
An EICR inspection is usually a fixed cost. Remedial work is different because the price depends on what fails, how serious the defect is and where the fault is located.
If the EICR inside a rented leasehold flat fails because of issues within the flat, the landlord usually needs to resolve the problem. Common examples include:
• No RCD protection where required for safety
• Damaged sockets
• Broken accessories
• Exposed conductors
• Unsafe bathroom electrical fittings
• Missing bonding
• Overheating at the consumer unit
• Borrowed neutrals
• Incorrect circuit labelling
• High resistance readings
• C1, C2 or FI observations
If the issue is connected to the communal supply or building infrastructure, it may need to be raised with the freeholder or managing agent. For example, if access is needed to a locked intake cupboard, landlord distribution board or communal meter room, the leaseholder may not be able to resolve the issue alone.
This is why clear reporting matters. A vague failed EICR can cause arguments. A properly written EICR should identify the observation, classification code and location as clearly as possible. Where remedial work is needed, the quotation should separate what can be repaired inside the flat from anything that needs freeholder or managing agent involvement.
If your property has already failed, our Remedial Work for Failed EICR Certificates service can help review the failed report, quote the required works and issue a satisfactory certificate once the faults are resolved.
One of the biggest misunderstandings in leasehold buildings is the difference between an individual flat EICR and a whole building or communal EICR.
An individual flat EICR is normally arranged for one flat. It is usually needed by a landlord, homeowner, buyer, seller or leaseholder. It checks the electrical installation serving that flat.
A communal area EICR is normally arranged for the shared parts of a building. It may be arranged by the freeholder, managing agent, right-to-manage company or residents’ management company. It checks shared electrical systems.
A whole building electrical inspection may be broader and could involve multiple supplies, distribution boards, flats, common parts, plant rooms and commercial units. This is usually more complex and may need staged access.
Problems happen when someone asks for “an EICR for the building” but only books an EICR for one flat. Problems also happen when a leaseholder assumes the communal EICR covers their own internal flat wiring. It usually does not.
If you are not sure which inspection is needed, the safest step is to identify the purpose of the report first:
• Is it for a rented flat?
• Is it for a sale or purchase?
• Is it for communal areas?
• Is it for an insurance request?
• Is it for a managing agent?
• Is it for a failed previous report?
• Is it for a mixed-use building?
Once the purpose is clear, the correct EICR can be booked.
Leasehold EICR disputes usually happen because responsibilities were not clarified before the inspection or remedial work.
Here are the most common disputes we see.
This usually happens when the landlord owns a leasehold flat and the EICR fails because of something that appears connected to the building supply. The landlord may say the freeholder should pay. The freeholder may say the installation inside the flat is the leaseholder’s responsibility.
The solution is to identify exactly where the defect is. If the issue is inside the flat’s consumer unit or final circuits, it is likely to sit with the flat owner or landlord. If it is part of the communal infrastructure, it may need managing agent involvement.
Some managing agents ask leaseholders to provide an EICR without clearly saying whether they need a report for the flat, the landlord supply, communal areas or insurance compliance. This causes confusion and repeated inspections.
Before booking, ask the managing agent exactly what they require:
• Do they need an EICR for the individual flat?
• Do they need a report for communal areas?
• Do they need proof from every leaseholder?
• Is this linked to insurance?
• Is there a specific deadline?
• Are there access restrictions?
A clear request avoids wasted time.
If the flat is rented, access must be arranged with the tenant. If the tenant refuses access or repeatedly cancels, the landlord should keep written evidence of attempts to arrange the EICR. This is particularly important where compliance deadlines are involved.
We regularly help landlords coordinate access with tenants. When you book your EICR certificate in London, provide the tenant’s contact details, preferred access windows and any instructions for keys or concierge access.
This is one of the most common pressure situations. A landlord books an EICR late, the report comes back unsatisfactory and the new tenant is due to move in within days.
This can create a chain reaction:
• Move-in date at risk
• Tenant becomes frustrated
• Letting agent pushes for urgent remedial work
• Contractor availability becomes limited
• Costs feel higher because everything is urgent
• Certificate cannot be finalised until issues are resolved
To avoid this, book the EICR before the property is marketed or as soon as the old tenant gives notice. If you are unsure about cost, check our EICR Certificate Cost page before booking.
If the freeholder or managing agent arranges electrical testing or remedial work for communal areas, leaseholders may ask why they are being charged. In service charge disputes, the lease terms and supporting documents matter. Leaseholders have rights to ask for a summary of service charges and inspect supporting paperwork.
From an electrical safety perspective, clear documentation helps reduce disputes. The managing agent should keep:
• The EICR report
• Contractor quotations
• Invoices
• Scope of works
• Photos where relevant
• Explanation of why the works were required
• Evidence of safety urgency where applicable
A landlord owns a two-bedroom leasehold flat in Battersea and rents it to tenants. The letting agent asks for an updated EICR before the tenancy renewal. The landlord assumes the previous certificate is still valid but cannot find the report.
An EICR is booked. During the inspection, the engineer identifies a damaged socket, poor circuit labelling and an issue with RCD protection. The report is unsatisfactory because remedial work is required.
The landlord initially asks whether the freeholder should pay because the meter is located in the communal cupboard. After reviewing the observations, it becomes clear the failed items relate to circuits inside the flat. The landlord approves the remedial work, the defects are corrected and a satisfactory certificate is issued.
The dispute is avoided because the report clearly separates the flat installation from the communal electrical area.
This type of situation is common in London. If the flat is rented, the landlord should treat the EICR as part of normal compliance management, just like gas safety, EPC and tenancy documentation.
A leaseholder in a converted Victorian house arranges an EICR before selling the flat. The engineer finds that some circuits are unclear and access is needed to a shared electrical cupboard controlled by the managing agent.
The buyer’s solicitor asks for clarification. The seller worries the sale will collapse.
Instead of guessing, the leaseholder contacts the managing agent and arranges access to the communal cupboard. Further checks confirm that the flat’s internal circuits are satisfactory, but the communal labelling needs improvement.
The flat sale continues because the issue is properly documented. The leaseholder provides the EICR and the managing agent agrees to review the communal labelling separately.
This is a good example of why leasehold EICRs need practical coordination. The inspection is not just about testing. It is also about access, documentation and clear responsibility.
A managing agent responsible for a block of flats asks every leaseholder to provide an EICR for their individual flat. Some leaseholders object and say the managing agent should arrange one report for the whole building.
The managing agent explains that the communal electrical installation is already covered separately, but the individual flats are demised to each leaseholder. The purpose of the request is to confirm that each flat’s internal electrical installation is safe, especially where leaseholders have carried out alterations over the years.
Several leaseholders arrange inspections. Some reports are satisfactory. Others identify issues such as old consumer units, damaged sockets and unsafe DIY electrical alterations.
The key lesson is that a block can have a communal EICR and still have separate issues inside individual flats. One report does not automatically cover everything.
This is one of the most important leasehold questions.
If the EICR fails because of an issue that appears to involve communal wiring, the next step is not to argue immediately. The next step is to identify the boundary of responsibility.
The engineer may need to confirm:
• Is the defect inside the flat?
• Is the defect before the flat’s consumer unit?
• Is the issue in a communal intake cupboard?
• Is access needed to a landlord distribution board?
• Does the circuit serve only the flat or shared areas?
• Is there mixed ownership of equipment?
• Are there limitations because access was not available?
If the defect cannot be fully verified during the first inspection, the report may include FI, meaning Further Investigation is required. Government guidance confirms that FI observations must be investigated, while C1 and C2 observations require remedial action for the installation to be considered satisfactory.
This is where an experienced EICR company matters. A poor report can create more confusion. A clear report helps everyone understand what needs doing and who needs to be involved.
A freeholder or managing agent may request electrical safety information from leaseholders, especially where there are insurance requirements, safety concerns, lease obligations or evidence of unauthorised alterations. Whether they can demand it, how they can enforce it and who pays depends on the lease and legal context.
From a practical perspective, leaseholders should not ignore the request. Instead, they should ask:
• What part of the lease requires this?
• Is the request for the individual flat only?
• Is there a deadline?
• Is this connected to building insurance?
• Will the managing agent accept a standard EICR?
• Does the electrician need any specific qualification or registration?
• Are there access requirements for communal cupboards?
If the leaseholder rents out the flat, arranging the EICR is usually sensible anyway because it may also support landlord compliance.
It depends on what the EICR is for and what the lease allows.
If the EICR relates to communal electrical systems, the cost may be recoverable through the service charge if the lease permits that type of cost. Service charges are controlled by the lease and leaseholders have rights to request information and supporting paperwork.
If the EICR relates only to one individual flat, it is less likely to be treated as a communal service charge cost. In most cases, the leaseholder or landlord pays directly for their own flat EICR.
This distinction matters. A managing agent should avoid mixing individual flat costs with communal building costs unless the lease supports it. Leaseholders should also avoid refusing every electrical safety cost without checking whether it relates to shared parts of the building.
Before booking an EICR for a London leasehold flat, prepare the following:
• Full property address
• Flat number
• Name required on the certificate
• Access contact name and phone number
• Tenant or occupant details if rented
• Parking or concierge instructions
• Location of the consumer unit
• Location of the electricity meter
• Whether access is needed to a communal cupboard
• Any previous EICR report
• Any known electrical issues
• Any managing agent requirements
• Any deadline for tenancy, sale, insurance or compliance
This makes the inspection smoother and reduces limitations on the report.
If the flat is rented and you need a straightforward booking route, use our Book Online page and provide the access details when submitting the booking.
If you are renting out a leasehold flat in London, you should check your EICR position before the tenancy starts.
You should confirm:
• Whether you already have a valid satisfactory EICR
• Whether the report is still within the recommended inspection interval
• Whether the report covers the correct flat
• Whether the report has the correct address and certificate name
• Whether any C1, C2 or FI observations were resolved
• Whether remedial certificates or evidence of works are available
• Whether the tenant has been given the report
• Whether the letting agent has a copy
• Whether the managing agent needs any separate information
• Whether access is needed to communal electrical areas
Do not rely on “the previous owner said it was fine” or “the building has an EICR.” The individual flat still needs its own clear documentation if it is being rented.
For a deeper landlord-focused explanation, see our EICR Certificates for Landlords in London page.
Most EICR disputes can be avoided with good preparation and clear communication.
Here is the practical checklist.
Is the EICR for the flat, communal area, whole building or commercial part of the property?
If the freeholder or managing agent asked for the EICR, ask exactly what they require.
If the meter cupboard or intake room is locked, request access before the engineer attends.
Good paperwork prevents repeat arguments later.
Do not merge everything into one argument. Identify where each defect is located.
If the report is unsatisfactory, act quickly. Delays can affect tenants, sales, insurance or managing agent deadlines.
Leasehold flats can be more complicated than standard houses. Use a company that understands London flats, access problems, managing agent requirements and remedial follow-up.
At London EICR Certificates, we inspect leasehold flats, rented flats, owner-occupied flats, communal areas, commercial premises and mixed-use buildings across London. We understand that leasehold electrical safety is not just a technical issue. It is also a documentation, access and responsibility issue.
Our team can help with:
• EICR certificates for leasehold flats
• EICR certificates for landlords
• EICR inspections for homeowners
• Communal area electrical inspections
• Commercial EICR certificates
• Failed EICR remedial work
• Re-testing after remedial work
• Tenant access coordination
• Managing agent requirements
• Urgent pre-tenancy EICR bookings
• Clear reporting and practical advice
If your EICR fails, we can provide a quotation for the required remedial work and issue the updated satisfactory documentation once the work has been completed.
You can start with our EICR Services in London page, check likely pricing on our EICR Certificate Cost page or book directly through Book Online.
In most cases, the person responsible for the electrical installation being tested is the person who pays. But in leasehold flats, that answer must always be checked against the type of installation, the use of the property and the lease structure.
If the EICR is for an individual rented flat, the landlord usually arranges and pays for it. If the flat is owner-occupied, the leaseholder usually arranges their own inspection. If the EICR relates to communal electrical areas, the freeholder, management company or managing agent usually arranges it, with costs potentially recovered through service charges where the lease allows.
The biggest mistake is assuming one EICR covers everything. A flat EICR, communal EICR and whole building electrical inspection are not always the same thing.
The safest approach is simple: clarify the purpose, identify the area being tested, arrange access properly and keep the paperwork clear. That prevents delays, avoids disputes and protects everyone involved.
If you own, rent, manage or are buying a leasehold flat in London and need clear electrical safety documentation, London EICR Certificates can help you book the correct inspection and avoid unnecessary confusion.
Book your leasehold flat EICR today through our online booking page or contact our team for advice before arranging the inspection.
Find answers to common questions about EICR certificates and electrical safety inspections in London. Visit our FAQ page on EICRcertificates.com for more information.
